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Does Muscle Memory exist, or is it a myth?

  • Thread starter Thread starter SSAlexSS
  • Start date Start date

Does muscle memory exist?

  • yes

    Votes: 77 84.6%
  • no

    Votes: 1 1.1%
  • do not know

    Votes: 13 14.3%

  • Total voters
    91
I;ve never take prolonged periods of time off. However, in the autobiography, "Gorilla Suit" by Bob Paris, he took years off from trainning and then came back and had excellent and super fast gains the second time around.

-Fatty
 
i am not 100% sure that it exists. but i do know used to be like a 240 pound fatass. i could lift so much weight iwth my legs. i lost all my weight got super weak due to bad way of dieting. well i got into the gym and all my leg and back lifts go up like crazy. so i think my muscles remember how they used to get hit everyday when i tried to walk around. its that or i am just getting lucky. but i lean more towards yes due to this fact.:fro:
 
sure, look at kevin levrone. he trains for the olympia what, like 3 months out of the year? personally not my bag
 
Of course it exists. I trained hard for 5 years and then took 2 years off. When I started back up I was only slightly ahead of where I had been when I first started training. But I gained all of the size and strength back in 9 months (probably gained 90% of it back in the first 6 months). So yes, if you trained for several years and then take an extended layoff, the gains will come back FAR quicker the second time around.
 
I stopped lifting/eating for 4 months...lost all size, weight, and strength. (lost about 30 lbs...and it wasn't 30lbs of fat). I started back up and within 7 months I gained back 110% of my original gains...
 
hell yah! once you've been there before it much easier & quicker to get back there again.

kinda like the first time you replace a starter or alternator that shit takes all f*cking day! but the next time you gotta do takes half the time.

usually....
 
And actually I was wondering the same thing, here's why:

theoretically, if you do a cycle, you get bigger and stronger, and your muscles are supposed to remember these good ole days, when you juiced. So, after the cycle,, when you get small again, why don't your muscles remember their former size, and don't get to that condition really fast again?
 
sure does. took me 4, 5 years to get to where i am now. then i take a few months off, lose pretty much everything, then i get back into the gym and 2, 3 weeks later i'm back in top shape. and probably better.
 
CCCP said:
And actually I was wondering the same thing, here's why:

theoretically, if you do a cycle, you get bigger and stronger, and your muscles are supposed to remember these good ole days, when you juiced. So, after the cycle,, when you get small again, why don't your muscles remember their former size, and don't get to that condition really fast again?

Your body produces around 70-100 mg (for a healthy 20ish male) of test a week naturally. Your body simply cannot make enough test to hold +25lbs. Imagine, your shooting 1000mg of test a week, 10x the amount your body produces naturally. This is part of the reason post cycle clomid/nolva is important. Your natural T production is all but shut down on these cycles, and when you come off, you need to restart your natural T levels as fast as you can. Thus why people who don't do anything post cycle typically lose more of their gains than people who do followup with clomid/nolva therapy.

This next part is my belief, which some people may or may not agree with. This is provided that training and diet is constant, as well as good. Some people can retain more of their gains than others with one cycle. I believe those that tend to retain nearly all of their gains are people still under or at their genetic potential. Those that lose alot are already over their genetic potential. They lose alot of their gains because the body always tries to go back to where it's most comfortable and efficient.

For example, 5'5 185 - and being asian (which are typically a lighter build), I think I would be around my genetic potential. I could maybe pack on another 10lbs if I wanted. So say I was 195 and did a cycle that put me at 220. I could theoritically hold that weight if I consumed enough food, but I would probably end up with something like 30% BF. If I ate what I regularly did, or maybe a little more, I would drop down to around 195 again. I think the only way I could ever reach 220, if I wanted to, was to do cycles every 6 months or so. Of course, my body probably isn't the most efficient (or healthy) right now - it seems to work best at around 155-160.
 
I think it has to do with the amount of nuclei that are created in the muscle. The more nuclei there are the more DNA transcription can take place at once which results in faster protein synthesis.

This is a wild guess ;).

I believe muscle memory exists though.
 
I'm not sure how it works, but I believe that it does.

In high school and college I worked out like a mad man and got up to 260 lbs, had a 600 deadlift, ect. I got this way by forcing myself to eat 8,000 calories per day.

I then took about 3-4 years off (2 years where I only casually worked out and 2 years after that where I did no weight training) and ate maybe 2,500 calories per day. I weighed about 205 lbs. I then decided to get back into training. I did a few (like 3 training sessions) and then decided to check my deadlift--a little over 500 lbs. Within 3 months I was back up to 225 and deadlifting 635. Within 8 months I was back up to 260. This was not the result of anabolics, ect.; just my body remembering where it was.

For the last 2 years, I have fluctuated from about 235 and 260, and on occassion have starved myself down to 220 to make weight for contests. I can tell that if I want to get quality weight over 260 (the point where I was in college) it will have to be a conscious effort where I eat more than I want to eat like I did back in college.
 
I agree with rbrown, what originally took me 5 years to build up to when I was younger came back in a little over 12 months when I started training again.

Of course I'm a little older now and maybe that's a factor.
 
It dosent exist physiologically... thats a proven fact.
however it exists psychologically
1) Youve already been there, easier to bust through mental barriers
2) You know how to train, and what works well for you. A person can spend years fucking around in the gym before they find out what works
3) Steroids and better cycles have some effect on this as well.

Ill site a few studies if necessary
 
I took most the this year off coming back in sept,at that point until now I have added 15lbs of bw,not alot of noticable fat, and my strength gains are above where I use to be before I went on hiatus
 
SlavikHavik said:
It dosent exist physiologically... thats a proven fact.
however it exists psychologically
1) Youve already been there, easier to bust through mental barriers
2) You know how to train, and what works well for you. A person can spend years fucking around in the gym before they find out what works
3) Steroids and better cycles have some effect on this as well.

Ill site a few studies if necessary

i was waiting for someone to get the right answer. Memory exists one place in the human body..thats the brain. As for people taking time off and then gaining it all back, i dont think that has really been explained. Maybe it has to do with metabolism and things of that sort
 
I competed in bobybuilding and powerlifting from 85' - 91' then stopped completley. I lost a hell of a lot of size.....265# down to 230# ......3" off arms.......7" off chest....etc. When I started back lifting again in 2002' I gained it all back in 6-8 months and now I'm 295# - 310# and still gaining. ??????
 
If you take a look at my journal, you can judge for yourself...

Personaly, i belive in it. In a period of about 2 months, ive gained about 30 pounds, still not too what i was at though.
 
SlavikHavik said:
It dosent exist physiologically... thats a proven fact.
however it exists psychologically
1) Youve already been there, easier to bust through mental barriers
2) You know how to train, and what works well for you. A person can spend years fucking around in the gym before they find out what works
3) Steroids and better cycles have some effect on this as well.

Ill site a few studies if necessary

Please site the studies. I'd be interested to see what they have to say. I don't think anyone is suggesting that muscles have memory. However, I do think that over time training and eating a lot changes your body's set point in some way. I can now eat a moderate amount and maintain my bodyweight.

I completely disagree that there is no physiological aspect to this concept. I wasn't even training hard and got back to close to my 600 lb deadlift. I believe that if some other 205 lb guy with my same genetics, but without my prior training, came into the gym and trained exactly as I did, they wouldn't even be close to those numbers. But I'm always interested in being proved wrong.
 
i believe in muscle memory, but i know its not actually in the muscles. the neural pathways that control the muscle are where the memory is. why is my left arm bigger, but my right arm is stronger? because i have better neural coordination with my right hand, and thus a better "muscle memory".

i know it exists because i can hop on a bike and within a couple of weeks i can bunnyhop 3 feet again. it just takes some time for my muscles to get back into shape. the memory is in my mind and my nerve pathways.
 
Hope this helps the discussion. Something I pulled from medline.

Title Myosin heavy chain IIX overshoot in human skeletal muscle.
Author Andersen, JL; Aagaard, P
Affiliation Copenhagen Muscle Research Centre, Department of Molecular Muscle Biology, Rigshospitalet Section 9312, Juliane Mariesvej 20, First Floor, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark. [email protected]
Source Muscle & nerve, 2000 Jul, 23(7):1095-104

Abstract The distribution of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, fiber type composition, and fiber size of the vastus lateralis muscle were analyzed by sodium dodecylsulfate polymerase gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), ATPase histochemistry, and immunocytochemistry in a group of adult sedentary men before and after 3 months of heavy-load resistance training and, subsequently, after 3 months of detraining. Following the period of resistance training, MHC IIX content decreased from 9.3 +/- 2.1% to 2.0 +/- 0.8% (P < 0.01), with a corresponding increase in MHC IIA (42.4 +/- 3.9% vs. 49.6 +/- 4.0% [P < 0.05]). Following detraining the amount of MHC IIX reached values that were higher than before and after resistance training (17.2 +/- 3.2% [P < 0.01]). Changes in fiber type composition resembled the changes observed in MHC isoform content. Significant hypertrophy was observed for the type II fibers after resistance training. Maximal isometric quadriceps strength increased after resistance training, but returned to pretraining levels after detraining. The present results suggest that heavy-load resistance training decreases the amount of MHC IIX while reciprocally increasing MHC IIA content. Furthermore, detraining following heavy-load resistance training seems to evoke an overshoot in the amount of MHC IIX to values markedly higher than those observed prior to resistance training. (Copyright 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)

Language English
Publication Year 2000
Publication Type Clinical Trial; Journal Article
 
The longest layoff Ive taken is around 2 months, doing very little, and I got it back in 6 months. The recovery isnt quick for me at all, but its much faster then it would be if I started back in that condition. Not sure what exactly is the cause.
 
I took a 7 year layoff, trained 6 months then took another 6 months off, now I'm back in the gym since July. In July I couldn't leg press 3 plates per side for 10 reps. Now I'm doing 4x10 with 7 plates per side AFTER squatting and they're not absolutely balls out sets. I could probably get 8 plates for 6-8 reps but I expect to be doing 10-11 plates by July.
I probably squat 315 max now whereas I was hitting 450 before my layoff. I expect that to be 500+ by Christmas.

Shakarov style, baby.....no belt, no wraps, no spotter.
 
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In order to understand the answer to the question, we must first look at a the mechanisms/fascillitating factors by which muscular contration and hypertrophe occur

Nerve and blood supply:
The normal activity of a skeletal muscle is absolutely dependent on nerves and its rich blood supply. In general, each muscle is served by one nerve, an artery and one or more veins, all of which enter or exit near the central part of the muscle and branch profusely. Each skeletal muscle fibre is supplied with a nerve ending that controls its activity. Contracting muscle fibres use huge amounts of energy, which requires a more or less continuous delivery of oxygen and nutrients by way of arteries. Muscle cells also give off large amounts of metabolic wastes that must be removed through veins if contraction is to remain efficient. Muscle capillaries, the smallest of the blood vessels, are long and winding, a feature that accommodates the changes in muscle length

Increased muscle bulk largely reflects increases in the size of individual muscle fibers (particularly the fast glycotic variety) rather than an increased number of muscle fibers. However, some of the increased muscle size may result from longtitudinal splitting or tearing of the enlarged fibres and subsequent growth of these “split” cells, or conversely it may arise from the proliferation and fusion of satellite cells. Vigorously stressed muscle fibers contain more mitochondrion, form more myofilaments and myofibrils and more glycogen. The amount of connective tissue between the cells also increases. Collectively these changes promote significant increases in muscle strength and size.
It is my belief, that despite atrophe in the size of the muscles following a layoff, that many of the aforementioned systems/mechanisms still function/exist well above that the pertaining to the individual, before any training was undertaken. In respect to the number of muscle fibres (although this is a contentious issue), the previously explained theory shows how this adaption is a permanent one. In respect to nerve impulses, strength is defined by the number of nerves that one can stimulate, and the sequebtial order in which they are stimulated in order to complete a task. A pattern of recruitment has to been learned. Just like any memory, it is stored in the brain. With the correct stimulus, it can be quickly recalled/more efficiently deciphered after a period of non use.

Even at rest, muscles receive weak intermittent stimuli from the nervous system, thus the recruitment pattern is enforced even when not training. So powerful is the power of the mind, that even thinking about specific movements reinforces neuromuscular patterns, stimulating the c.n.s. and causing small sequential muscular contractions relative to the movement rehersed in the mind.

Mucle proteins in the muscle are cannibalized by the body, as they are used for the production of energy. The result is that fibrous tissue is replaced by connective tissue (atrophe).
However, the muscle retains a greater amount of nuclei than average, thus this combined with a more efficient oxygen supply ( aided by an improved network of capillaries) would suggest that protein synthesis occurs at a rate above that of the untrained, coupled with a more efficient supply (in comparison to the untrained) of nutrients to the muscles.
In conclusion, muscular gains following a layoff period can be contrasted to the experience of the endurance athlete following a period of inactivity or injury. Previous activity dictates that certain bodily systems still function highly efficiently and as such regaining fitness can be achieved in a much quicker time than if a previous history of training did not exist.
 
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Well, being as this is my first post, hopefully one of many to come, I thought I would throw abit of input into this discussion, from various sources across the net, I would like to add that the "Fascia" is the key to Muscle Memory, There are 2 types of Fascia, one is just below the skin surface that holds fat and water, the other one is the deep Fascia that surrounds the outer layer of the muscle, this fascia is very dense and strong, (think of it as a balloon).. when we first try blow up a new balloon its difficult, being as its never been "stretched" before... after we have blown up the balloon 10 or more times for example, the shape of the balloon changes, and it becomes easier to blow up, due to it being "stretched" over time...

By no means am I saying this is the be all and end all of building muscles, or even getting back to a "pre-size" that you was at before, but its common sense that if you have a "balloon" thats been stretched previously, then it will fill up faster, than one that hasn`t been "stretched"...

There is (as many of you will probably know) a few sites out there, that give instructions on how to "stretch" the Fascia while "cooling down" from a workout, to me personnally this makes great sense to "stretch" the fasica after a workout, as this allows the muscle fibre`s to have more room to repair and regenerate, hence making muscle size easier to build.. im not saying that just "stretching" alone will help increase your muscles to the size of houses... but it makes sense to me anyway, that if there is more room for the muscle to regen/repair then this "may" help with increasing size...

What I have posted here, may of already been covered in this thread, however not being to techy minded with all these fancy words, I put it as simple as I could, just incase anyone else out there is like me...

Hope my first post was ok... Just my little input... LOL
 
I personally think once you've started training & kept with a constant routine & healthy diet, that it doesn't matter how long a break is.

I will admit in my case due to the hyper thyroid I've suffered from since 2000 I lost about 25-30lbs of lean mass shrinking from 225lbs to a weak 200lbs who couldn't even bench his own weight.

Once everything became normal my strength & body weight went back up, but I haven't been able to get back to 225lbs or the power that I had.

I'm about a quarter of the way there.

But what's funny is I'm much stronger with certain exercises now than I was before & I'm much happier with the way I look now.
 
i believe it does since i was sidelined for about 3 weeks and it only took about 2 additional weeks to get my strength and some definition back... i also heard this from my uncle therefore i do believe it exists since he's been weight training for 30+ years
 
MsBeverlyHills said:
"muscle Memory"-- depends on how long youve been training before your break & how long you take off--

fatty-- cool avatar :)





Couldnt agree more, and it definatly exists I can be living proof of that its saved me twice and the feeling of coming back is GREAT its like arnold said in pumping iron "Its like im coming all da time" (well at least thats the swing of what hes trying to say anyway, you get the point :argue: )


"Life is ours we live it our way"


METALLICA
'Nothing else matters' :evil:
 
I never believed much in it until it happened to me recently. I was lifting for a few years regularly, took a couple years off and now I'm back and my gains are coming on FAST.
 
if it did not exist.... many including me would of given up long ago....
took a very long time natural.. to get much size..... I lifte about 2 years...
gained about 20lbs... about 3 inches on my arms... i quite lifting for about..
6months... and was hardley eating... i went all the way back to my old size..
....kicked it back in... and it about 6 months i was all the way back.... and that is just my 1st little experience with it.... taken off few time since then.... size comes back fast... gotta love it...
 
at first i was skeptical, but after coming back from a big layoff, im increasing really fast back...

well see how far it extends to (like at what percent of my old weights it starts getting regularly paced again)
 
Quit an old but on going post. I recently wrote a post about this too. If i could vote i would, YES muscle memory exists

Shaun
 
Yes it deff exist i lost my car keys and my muscels told me were they were lol


J/k but ofcourse they have memory otherwise it would be back to day one after every time off, an for me it doesnt take long to get back were i left off last even if its a year or two
 
i think it must exist
be it mind or muscles i dont know
my own experience tells me theres something to it
ive been back training for 5 months now after a 20 year layoff
yep 20 YEARS
im 40 and now look exactly the same bodywise as i did at my peak
my strength hasnt returned the same though thats gonna take more time and effort
p.s. if anyone knows how to make your face look the same as it did years ago ill let you have a free go on 'er indoors':stilleto:
 
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